Las Vegas Divorce Attorney
Gastelum Attorneys represents spouses in Clark County divorce proceedings — contested and uncontested divorce, high-net-worth property division, military divorce, and same-week consultations. Bilingual English and Spanish.
Jennifer Setters, J.D.
Managing Attorney & Founder
Authored by Jennifer Setters, J.D., Managing Attorney & Founder, Gastelum Attorneys · Nevada Bar No. 13126 · Boyd School of Law, UNLV
Last reviewed: May 7, 2026
On this page:
- New divorce filings — uncontested Joint Petitions and contested Complaints alike
- Cases involving community property, business interests, or hidden assets
- High-conflict divorces with custody disputes, allegations of abuse, or relocation
- Military divorce, USFSPA pension division, and SCRA-related matters
Las Vegas Divorce: Quick Answers
- In Nevada, divorce is no-fault — the most common ground is incompatibility under NRS 125.010. No separation period is required.
- Only six continuous weeks of Nevada residency are required to file (NRS 125.020).
- Nevada is a community property state — assets and debts acquired during the marriage are presumptively split equally under NRS 123.220.
- Uncontested divorces typically finalize in 1–3 weeks; contested cases in Clark County typically take 9–11 months.
- Attorney fees range from $2,500–$5,000 (uncontested) to $10,000–$30,000+ (contested) based on case complexity.
- Since SB 432 took effect October 2025, Clark County family court filings must redact specified personally identifying information to protect family privacy.
Gastelum Attorneys is a Las Vegas family law firm representing spouses in divorce proceedings in Clark County’s Eighth Judicial District Court. Our six attorneys handle contested and uncontested divorce, community property division, child custody, child support, spousal support, and high-net-worth matters under Nevada Revised Statutes Chapter 125. Since 2018, the firm has handled over 5,000 family law matters in English and Spanish across Las Vegas, Henderson, and North Las Vegas.
The substantial majority of contested divorces resolve before trial. Our role is to position you for the best possible settlement — or trial outcome when settlement isn’t possible — starting from the very first temporary order. The spouse who enters proceedings prepared, documented, and legally advised consistently reaches better outcomes than the spouse who waits. También disponible en español.
Divorce Outcomes Are Often Decided Early
The first weeks of a contested Las Vegas divorce shape the rest of the case. Judges look at financial disclosure compliance, communication patterns, parental involvement, and whether each spouse is acting in good faith. Gastelum Attorneys helps clients prepare before temporary orders are entered, not after the other side has already shaped the narrative. The earlier you bring an attorney into your case, the more strategic options remain available to you.
Need Help With a Divorce Case?
Every Las Vegas divorce is different. Our family law attorneys can evaluate your circumstances, explain how Nevada law applies to your case, and outline a strategy to protect your financial position and parental rights.
Do I Need a Las Vegas Divorce Lawyer?
Nevada law allows spouses to represent themselves in divorce proceedings, but the practical consequences of doing so are significant. Here’s how to think through whether you need an attorney:
You almost certainly need a lawyer if: the other spouse has an attorney; the case involves business interests, retirement accounts, or real estate beyond the marital home; one spouse suspects undisclosed or hidden assets; minor children are involved; allegations of domestic violence or substance abuse exist; or one spouse plans to relocate. These are situations where an unrepresented spouse is at a structural disadvantage regardless of the merits of their position.
You may be able to handle it without an attorney if: both spouses agree on every aspect of property division, debt allocation, custody, and support; neither spouse has complex finances; and no safety concerns exist. Even in cooperative cases, having an attorney review the final Decree before you sign typically costs far less than fixing a poorly drafted agreement later.
The financial disclosure question: Nevada requires each spouse to complete a Financial Disclosure Form under NRCP 16.2. Failure to disclose an asset can result in that asset being awarded entirely to the other spouse, even years after the divorce is final. An experienced divorce attorney audits the opposing spouse’s disclosure for inconsistencies that would otherwise be missed.
The temporary order problem: If support or custody needs to be set immediately and the other spouse files first, an unprepared spouse at the temporary order hearing often loses ground that takes months to recover. This is one of the most common and most avoidable mistakes we see.
Nevada Divorce Grounds and Residency Requirements
Nevada is one of the most divorce-friendly states in the country — in part because of its short residency requirement and broad no-fault grounds.
Grounds (NRS 125.010): Nevada permits divorce on three statutory grounds: (1) incompatibility, the no-fault ground used in the substantial majority of Las Vegas divorces; (2) separation for one year without cohabitation, rarely used because incompatibility is faster; and (3) insanity existing for two years prior to the action. No proof of fault, separation, or wrongdoing is required for an incompatibility filing.
Residency (NRS 125.020): Only one spouse must have lived in Nevada for at least six continuous weeks before filing. This is one of the shortest residency requirements in the country and is the reason Las Vegas has historically been a destination for divorce filings. Where you were married does not matter — you can file in Clark County’s Eighth Judicial District Court even if you were married in another state or country.
Filing venue: Divorce in Clark County is filed in the Family Division of the Eighth Judicial District Court at the Family Court complex (601 N. Pecos Road in Las Vegas). The case is assigned to one of the Family Division Departments based on the court’s rotating assignment system.
Contested vs. Uncontested Divorce in Las Vegas
The single biggest variable in a Las Vegas divorce is whether both spouses agree on every term. When they agree, Nevada offers a Joint Petition or Summary Proceeding that can finalize the divorce in 1–3 weeks. When they disagree on any material issue — property, custody, support — the case is contested and typically takes 9–11 months in Clark County.
1. Uncontested Divorce. Both spouses sign a Joint Petition under NRS 125.181–125.184, agreeing on division of community property and debt, custody and parenting time, child support, and (if applicable) spousal support. The Summary Proceeding allows the entire matter to be filed and entered without a court hearing in most cases. Cost typically ranges from $2,500 to $5,000 in legal fees. Time from intake to entered Decree is usually 1–3 weeks when both parties cooperate on document signing.
2. Contested Divorce. One spouse files a Complaint for Divorce; the other is served and files an Answer (and often a Counterclaim); the case is assigned a Department in the Eighth Judicial District Court Family Division. Mandatory financial disclosure under NRCP 16.2 follows. Most cases proceed through court-ordered mediation, and the substantial majority resolve before trial through negotiated settlement. Cost typically ranges from $10,000 to $30,000+ depending on issue complexity.
3. High-Conflict Divorce. These cases involve allegations of hidden assets, domestic violence, narcissistic personality dynamics, or significant disputes over relocation or custody. They often require forensic accountants, psychological evaluators, custody evaluators, and significant motion practice. Timelines run 12–24 months. Cost can exceed $30,000 to $50,000 or more depending on expert needs and trial length.
4. Default Divorce. If a served spouse fails to respond within the statutory window, the court can grant a default divorce on the petitioner’s terms. This sounds like a shortcut but rarely is — courts review default Decrees for fairness, and a one-sided default is often vacated on later motion. Service must be properly executed and documented before default can proceed.
A case can move between these categories. Cooperative Joint Petitions sometimes break down into contested filings when undisclosed assets emerge or one spouse changes position on custody. Conversely, contested cases frequently settle as discovery clarifies the facts. Procedural flexibility is one reason early case strategy matters more than the initial filing posture.
The Five Stages of a Contested Divorce in Clark County
Every contested Las Vegas divorce moves through five procedural stages in the Eighth Judicial District Court. Understanding the stages helps clients plan financial decisions, custody arrangements, and case strategy in real time.
Stage 1: Filing the Complaint · Week 1
The attorney drafts and files the Complaint for Divorce in Clark County’s Eighth Judicial District Court. The Complaint cites the statutory ground (typically incompatibility under NRS 125.010(1)), states residency under NRS 125.020, and requests specific relief: divorce, property division, custody, support. The opposing spouse must be served personally or by certified mail. The case is assigned to a Family Division Department.
Stage 2: Mandatory Financial Disclosure (NRCP 16.2) · Weeks 2–6
Within 30 days of the Answer being filed, both spouses must complete a Financial Disclosure Form listing all income, expenses, assets, and debts. Tax returns, pay stubs, bank statements, and retirement account statements are exchanged. Failure to disclose an asset can result in that asset being awarded entirely to the other spouse. This is the stage where forensic accountants are typically retained in cases with business interests, hidden income, or commingled funds.
Stage 3: Temporary Orders · Weeks 4–8
Either spouse may request temporary orders for custody, child support, spousal support, exclusive use of the marital home, or financial restraining orders. Temporary orders set the operating reality of the case while it pends — often shaping the final settlement. Arrangements that stay in place for several months tend to be harder to change later, because Clark County judges are reluctant to disrupt a stable parenting or support arrangement absent strong cause.
Stage 4: Mediation, Settlement, or Trial · Months 3–9
Most Clark County cases are referred to court-connected mediation through the Family Mediation Center. The substantial majority of contested divorces resolve through negotiated settlement before trial — either at mediation, in informal four-way meetings, or by stipulation. The cases that proceed to trial typically involve disputed business valuations, hidden-asset claims, or contested custody. Trial readiness throughout discovery is what drives favorable settlement terms.
Stage 5: Decree of Divorce · Month 9–11 (typical contested)
The Decree is the final court order ending the marriage and binding both parties on every issue: property, debt, custody, support, name change. Once entered, it can only be modified by future motion (custody, support) or by appeal (property division, with rare exceptions). Under SB 432 (effective October 2025), Decrees and supporting filings must redact specified personally identifying information to protect family privacy in public records.
Why Las Vegas Divorces Are Different
Divorce in Clark County is shaped by economic conditions and legal patterns that don’t exist in most other U.S. jurisdictions: irregular gaming and hospitality income, rapid post-2020 home-equity appreciation, a high-volume Family Division, and Nevada’s status as one of only nine community property states.
Gaming, hospitality, and irregular-income spouses
Tipped employees, dealers, hospitality managers, performers, and gig-economy workers represent a substantial share of Clark County’s workforce. Their reported W-2 income often differs significantly from take-home cash flow. In divorce, accurately characterizing tip income, tournament earnings, and seasonal bonuses requires forensic accounting techniques that aren’t routine in salary-driven jurisdictions. NRS 125B.070 child support calculations and NRS 125.150 alimony factors both turn on actual gross monthly income, not reported income alone.
Real estate appreciation and the marital home
Many Clark County homes purchased in 2018–2021 have appreciated significantly, creating substantial community equity even on relatively short marriages. When one spouse made a separate-property down payment, characterizing the equity properly requires Malmquist apportionment — the formula Nevada courts use to allocate appreciation between separate and community estates. Getting the Malmquist calculation right often produces five- or six-figure differences in the final property division.
The Eighth Judicial District Family Division
Clark County’s Family Division handles a substantial volume of divorce, custody, and support matters. Each Department has its own scheduling rhythms, mediation referral patterns, and judicial preferences. An attorney who appears regularly before a particular judge knows that judge’s expectations on financial disclosure timing, motion length, parenting plan structure, and trial procedure. That familiarity translates to fewer continuances, cleaner motions, and better-aligned strategy — not legal advantage, but procedural fluency.
Community property in a transient population
Las Vegas has high in-migration: many divorcing couples married in another state and acquired property both there and in Nevada. Nevada applies its community property rules to assets acquired while spouses were Nevada residents (NRS 123.220), but tracing pre-Nevada acquisitions often requires reconstructing financial history across multiple states. Quasi-community property rules can apply to assets acquired during the marriage in a non-community-property state.
Mandatory parenting education for divorces with minor children
Clark County family court typically requires both parents in a divorce involving minor children to complete a court-approved parenting education or “COPE” (Cooperative Parenting Education) class before the Decree of Divorce is entered. The class addresses the impact of divorce on children and co-parenting communication. Knowing this requirement up front avoids last-minute delays at decree entry.
Areas of Family Law We Handle
Gastelum’s Las Vegas divorce attorneys handle every common matter that arises in or alongside a Nevada divorce. Each linked page below contains a deeper Q&A and statutory walkthrough.
Joint and sole custody, parenting plans, relocation, and modification under NRS 125C.0035 and SB 275 (2023).
Establishment, modification, and enforcement under NRS 125B.070, including Martinez v. Martinez (Nev. 2024) transportation-cost adjustments.
11-factor analysis under NRS 125.150, the unofficial Tonopah Formula benchmark, and Kogod v. Cioffi-Kogod (Nev. 2019) framework.
Community property under NRS 123.220, separate property tracing, commingling, and Malmquist apportionment of home equity.
Prenuptial & Postnuptial Agreements
Nevada-enforceable agreements under NRS 123A (Premarital Agreement Act), drafting and litigation challenges.
Separation maintenance under NRS 125.190 — an option for couples preserving insurance, military benefits, or religious requirements.
USFSPA pension division, Servicemembers Civil Relief Act protections, and military-specific custody considerations.
Adult and minor guardianship in Clark County, including emergency and limited guardianship petitions.
How Much Does a Las Vegas Divorce Cost?
Total legal cost depends almost entirely on whether the case is contested. Uncontested divorces typically range from $2,500 to $5,000. Contested cases run $10,000 to $30,000 or more. High-conflict cases with forensic accountants, custody evaluators, or full trial can exceed $50,000.
Las Vegas family law attorneys generally bill $350–$650 per hour. Most firms, including Gastelum, charge an initial retainer that is applied to billable work as it accrues. The client receives monthly invoices showing how the retainer is being spent. Court filing costs are approximately $300, separate from attorney fees.
Cost variables that drive contested-case fees include: number of contested issues; hidden-asset claims requiring forensic accounting; business valuation; custody evaluation; depositions; expert witness retention; and motion practice. The biggest single multiplier is whether opposing counsel is willing to negotiate in good faith on financial disclosures — obstruction triples discovery cost.
📊 Free estimating tools: The Nevada alimony calculator applies the Tonopah Formula benchmark; the Nevada child support calculator applies the NRS 125B.070 tiered formula. Both are estimates, not legal advice.
Call (702) 979-1455 or contact us online to discuss fees for your specific situation. We offer payment plans and financing options.
How Long Does a Las Vegas Divorce Take?
Timeline depends on whether the case is contested and the complexity of the issues:
- Uncontested Joint Petitions: 1–3 weeks from intake to entered Decree
- Contested cases through mediation: 6–9 months in Clark County
- Contested cases requiring discovery and trial preparation: 9–11 months
- High-conflict cases with forensic accountants, custody evaluations, or full trial: 12–24 months
The biggest delays in Clark County come from spouses who aren’t prepared — missing financial disclosure deadlines, incomplete documentation, failing to complete the COPE class. Trial scheduling in the Eighth Judicial District is typically 4–8 months out from the trial-readiness conference.
Bilingual Las Vegas Divorce Representation
More than 40% of consultations at Gastelum are conducted in Spanish, based on internal firm intake records. The firm operates a separate Spanish-language website at gastelumattorneysespanol.com, and bilingual representation is available throughout the case — not only at intake.
A divorce involves discussions about money, children, infidelity, and fear. Those conversations — with the attorney, with the opposing party at mediation, in deposition, on the witness stand — carry meaningful nuance in the speaker’s first language that even a careful interpreter can flatten. Tone, hesitation, idiomatic emphasis, and family-relationship vocabulary all carry weight. Native bilingual representation preserves that nuance.
Practical implications: client meetings, document drafting, mediation, settlement conferences, depositions of Spanish-speaking witnesses, and witness preparation can all proceed without third-party interpreters. Court appearances still use court-certified interpreters per Nevada court rules, but the attorney–client relationship and case strategy remain in the client’s primary language.
High-Net-Worth and Military Divorce
High-net-worth divorce in Nevada
Cases involving business interests, executive compensation, real estate portfolios, or substantial retirement assets require disclosure depth and expert support that routine cases don’t. Common technical questions: how to value a closely held business; how to characterize stock options and restricted stock grants vesting during the marriage; how to apportion appreciation on separate-property real estate held jointly; how to allocate retirement contributions across the marriage timeline. Forensic accountants and certified business valuators are typically retained early.
Common asset-tracing issues: commingling of separate-property funds with community accounts; transmutation of separate property into community property by deed; pre-marital business growth attributable to community labor (apportionment between separate and community estates); undisclosed offshore or cryptocurrency holdings. Each requires distinct discovery strategy and, in most contested cases, expert support.
High-net-worth cases also raise tax-allocation questions on the divorce itself. Capital gains exposure on the sale of appreciated real estate, the timing of retirement-account divisions through Qualified Domestic Relations Orders (QDROs), and the alimony tax treatment under post-2019 federal law all affect the true after-tax value of any settlement. Negotiating gross-dollar property splits without modeling the tax-affected outcome routinely produces lopsided actual results — one of the most common preventable losses in Nevada high-asset divorce.
Military divorce in Nevada
Active-duty service members, veterans, and military spouses face additional procedural and substantive rules. The Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA) permits stays of civil proceedings during active deployment. The Uniformed Services Former Spouses’ Protection Act (USFSPA) governs division of military retired pay; eligibility for direct payment from DFAS requires the 10/10 rule (10 years of marriage overlapping 10 years of creditable service). Tricare coverage, base privileges, and military residency rules add further complexity. See our military divorce lawyer page for a complete walkthrough.
The Las Vegas Divorce Attorneys at Gastelum
Six Nevada-licensed family law attorneys handle Gastelum cases. Each appears regularly in the Eighth Judicial District Court, Family Division. Matters are assigned based on case type, complexity, and language preference.
Founder & Managing Attorney · Nevada Bar No. 13126
UNLV William S. Boyd School of Law, J.D.; UNLV B.A., Criminal Justice. Founded Gastelum Attorneys in Las Vegas in 2018. Represents clients in the Eighth Judicial District Court in contested and uncontested divorce, custody, support, and high-net-worth matters. Bilingual: English and Spanish.
Supervising Attorney · Nevada State Bar
Yadira Santana serves as Supervising Attorney, focusing on divorce, child custody, child support, guardianship, and Nevada appellate family law. A first-generation Mexican-American raised in Las Vegas since age three, she earned her B.A. in English Literature from the University of Nevada, Reno and her J.D. from UNLV’s William S. Boyd School of Law. She clerked in the Eighth Judicial District Court with the Honorable Robert Teuton on the dependency calendar before joining the firm. Bilingual: English and Spanish.
Senior Associate · NV, NM, & D.C. Bar
Natricia Tricano is a Senior Associate licensed in Nevada, New Mexico, and the District of Columbia. She earned her J.D. from the University of New Mexico School of Law and an LLM in Litigation with Highest Honors from George Washington University. Before joining the firm, she served as a Staff Judge Advocate in the United States Army with assignments in Washington, D.C. and Taegu, Korea. She handles contested and uncontested divorce, child custody, child support, and high-conflict family litigation.
Maria Milano
Senior Associate
Associate · Nevada State Bar
Lisa Woodson is an Associate Attorney whose practice focuses on contested divorce, child custody disputes, complex property division, and spousal support. She earned her B.A. from Aurora University in 1996 and her J.D. from UNLV’s William S. Boyd School of Law in 2011. Before family law, she handled contract negotiation, product liability, consumer credit, privacy, and insurance disputes — broad litigation experience she now applies to divorce trials in Clark County Family Court.
Jillian Hardwick
Associate
470 Google reviews · 4.8 stars — Gastelum Attorneys has represented Clark County spouses in divorce matters since 2018. Our six attorneys handle divorce exclusively within Nevada family law — divorce, custody, support, adoption, and guardianship.
Frequently Asked Questions: Las Vegas Divorce Lawyer
An uncontested Nevada divorce filed as a Joint Petition or Summary Proceeding typically finalizes in 1 to 3 weeks. A contested divorce in Clark County typically takes 9 to 11 months from filing to entered Decree based on the firm’s caseload. High-conflict cases involving forensic accountants, business valuations, or contested custody can run 12 to 24 months. The single biggest variable is whether both parties cooperate on financial disclosure and mediation.
Attorney fees in Las Vegas range from $300 to $650 per hour. An uncontested divorce typically costs $2,500 to $5,000 in total legal fees. A contested divorce with property disputes runs $10,000 to $30,000 or more. High-conflict cases involving forensic accountants, depositions, and trial preparation can exceed $50,000. Most firms charge a retainer up front, applied to billable work as it accrues. Court filing costs are approximately $300 separate from attorney fees.
No. Nevada permits divorce on grounds of incompatibility under NRS 125.010 without any separation period. The only timing requirement is that one spouse must have lived in Nevada for at least six continuous weeks under NRS 125.020. The one-year separation ground exists in NRS 125.010 as an alternative but is rarely used because incompatibility is faster and requires no proof of separation. Where you were married does not matter — you can file in Clark County’s Eighth Judicial District Court even if you were married elsewhere.
Nevada is a community property state. Property and debt acquired during the marriage are presumptively divided equally between the spouses under NRS 123.220, unless the court finds compelling reasons for unequal division under NRS 125.150. Community property includes wages, retirement contributions made during the marriage, real estate purchased during the marriage, business interests grown during the marriage, and most debts. Separate property — assets owned before marriage, gifts, and inheritances — generally remains with the original owner, subject to tracing.
Yes. Nevada does not require both spouses to sign for a divorce to be granted. If your spouse refuses to respond after being properly served with the Complaint, the court can grant a default divorce after the response window closes. If your spouse contests the proceedings but refuses to cooperate with mediation or disclosure, the case proceeds to trial and the judge issues a binding ruling. A non-signing spouse cannot permanently block a Nevada divorce.
Nevada courts decide custody based on the best-interest-of-the-child standard codified at NRS 125C.0035. The statute enumerates a list of best-interest factors including each parent’s relationship with the child, the child’s needs, the parents’ ability to cooperate, the child’s preference if of sufficient age, and any history of domestic violence. SB 275 from 2023 strengthened the rebuttable presumption against custody to a parent with a history of domestic violence. There is a statutory preference for joint legal custody, and joint physical custody is increasingly common when both parents have stable households.
Legal separation under NRS 125.190, called separate maintenance, allows spouses to live apart and have a court divide property, debt, and custody — but the marriage is not terminated. Divorce terminates the marriage. Couples choose separate maintenance for religious reasons, to preserve insurance benefits, to maintain military spousal benefits requiring a marriage of certain length, or as a transitional step. Separate maintenance can be converted to divorce later. Both proceedings use the same Eighth Judicial District process and require the same financial disclosures.
Four factors meaningfully differentiate Las Vegas divorce attorneys: practice exclusivity (family law only versus general practice); trial readiness (cases prepared for trial from day one versus settlement-only practice); regular Eighth Judicial District appearances which build judicial familiarity and procedural fluency; and transparent fee structure including clear retainer scope, hourly rate, and billing cycle. For high-asset cases, also evaluate experience with forensic accounting and business valuation. For Spanish-speaking clients, native bilingual representation preserves nuance interpreters miss.
Five practical considerations before filing: gather financial documentation including tax returns, pay stubs, account statements, mortgage and retirement statements going back two to three years; understand Nevada’s six-week residency rule under NRS 125.020; consider whether temporary orders for custody or financial support are needed at filing because arrangements in place become harder to change later; think through whether to file first because the filing party generally controls case scheduling and venue; understand the SB 432 privacy redaction requirements for filings since October 2025.
An experienced Clark County family law attorney prepares a contested case as if it will go to trial, even when the goal is settlement. The pattern: immediate financial disclosure compliance under NRCP 16.2 with an internal audit to identify undisclosed or undervalued assets; early temporary orders to lock in custody and support arrangements before patterns harden; targeted discovery including interrogatories, requests for production, and depositions; expert retention early when needed for forensic accounting, business valuation, or custody evaluation; and a settlement framework prepared before mediation with trial-ready evidence behind it.
Why Las Vegas Couples Choose Gastelum Attorneys for Divorce
Since 2018, Gastelum Attorneys has been trusted by thousands of Clark County spouses to handle their most important divorce matters. Our team of six family law attorneys focuses exclusively on family law — divorce, custody, child support, spousal support, adoption, and guardianship. We do not dabble in divorce as a side practice.
5,000+ Family Law Cases: Our depth of experience means we’ve seen virtually every divorce scenario — from amicable Joint Petitions to high-conflict trials involving allegations of hidden assets, business valuations, and contested custody.
Strong in Both Mediation and Trial: Many cases settle through negotiation and mediation, saving time and money. But when the other side won’t be reasonable, we’re fully prepared to take your case to trial and fight for your rights in front of a judge.
Bilingual Services: We serve Las Vegas’s diverse community with fluent English and Spanish services throughout every stage of the divorce process.
Meet Managing Attorney Jennifer Setters
Jennifer Setters, J.D. is a first-generation Mexican-American and long-time Las Vegas resident. She earned her Bachelor of Arts in Criminal Justice from UNLV and her J.D. from the William S. Boyd School of Law. Fluent in English and Spanish, Jennifer founded Gastelum Attorneys in 2018 to help Nevada families navigate divorce, custody, and support matters with diligence and strategic focus. Under her leadership, the firm has grown to six attorneys and handled more than 5,000 cases across Clark County. Jennifer is licensed to practice law in Nevada (Nevada Bar No. 13126).
Speak With a Las Vegas Divorce Attorney This Week
Same-week consultations are available. Speak directly with a Nevada-licensed family law attorney — not a call center. Available in English and Spanish.
Gastelum Attorneys
718 S 8th Street, Las Vegas, NV 89101
This page was reviewed by the family law attorneys at Gastelum Attorneys and reflects Nevada law as of May 7, 2026. Laws change, and every case is different. This information is educational and does not constitute legal advice for your specific situation.
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